Data Centre Magazine March 2026, Issue 40 | Page 52

workloads. Traditional enterpriseoriented facilities – designed around low rack densities, static power allocation and air-only cooling – are no longer sufficient for AI and LLM deployments.
At SC Zeus,“ AI-ready” is not a marketing term: it is an engineering principle. From day one, our sites are designed to support significantly higher rack densities, liquid-cooling readiness and modular electrical and mechanical systems that can evolve over time. This includes floor loading, ceiling heights, pipe routing, power distribution architecture and chilled-water capacity that can accommodate both current and next-generation cooling technologies.
In markets such as Japan, South Korea, and Southeast Asia – where land, power and timelines are increasingly constrained – future-proofing must be embedded at the design stage.
Our approach focuses on flexibility: enabling customers to deploy today at moderate densities while retaining the ability to scale to AI-era requirements without disruptive retrofits. This longterm engineering mindset underpins SC Zeus’ 20-year asset lifecycle strategy across the region.
Q. WHAT IS SC ZEUS’ STRATEGY FOR SECURING JUST-IN-TIME, HIGH-CAPACITY POWER IN SUPPLY-CONSTRAINED MARKETS?

» Power availability has become the primary bottleneck for data centre development across APAC. In cities

52 March 2026